Magiere the dhampir and her associate, the half-elf Leesil, are on a trip to discover the secrets and techniques in their mysterious pasts. yet first their services as vampire hunters is needed on behalf of a small village being plagued by a creature of limitless and unbelievable strength.

During this 6th quantity of The background of Middle-earth the tale reaches The Lord of the earrings. within the go back of the Shadow (an deserted name for the 1st quantity) Christopher Tolkien describes, with complete quotation of the earliest notes, define plans, and narrative drafts, the tricky evolution of The Fellowship of the hoop and the sluggish emergence of the conceptions that reworked what J.

Extra resources for Sister of the Dead (The Noble Dead Saga I, Book 3)

Example text

Lords and Ladies] His role as a deity is to hear the occult voice of the prey. He is a good listener, but his success rate at answering prayers is not high. His worshippers, unfortunately, tend to die shortly after calling upon his name. How he got his name is an interesting example of interaction between one universe and another. At any one time there are millions of particles of inspiration and information pulsating through the multiverse, pouring out from the minds of various sentient species.

Then there was Quezovercoatl the Feathered Boa, a demon who went off to become a god to the humans of the Tezuman Empire and teach them how to cut the hearts out of one another on top of pyramids. It is thought that he had picked up his ideas from the Aztecs of Mexico, and likewise (more or less) his name. He was half-man, half-chicken, half-jaguar, half-scorpion, and half mad. However, he was also only six inches high, so when forced to manifest himself physically he came to a sad, squishy end.

The two heroines of the play decide to make a fool of a man who is pestering them by persuading him to disguise himself as a ghost and meet them at midnight under an oak tree in Windsor Park. Describing this ghost, one says: There is an old tale goes, that Herne the hunter, Sometime a keeper here in Windsor Forest, Doth all the winter time, at still midnight, Walk round about an oak, with great ragg舗d horns; And there he blasts the trees, bewitches cattle, And makes the cows yield blood, and shakes a chain In a most hideous and dreadful manner.